17 Top Scientists Misunderstand AI
来源:COLLECTIONS OF TAIJIEVOLUTIONISM | 作者:YONG DUAN | 发布时间: 2021-11-06 | 5840 次浏览 | 分享到:

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1.The threat to human employment.

2. AI will make existing systems more vulnerable to hacking. Sophisticated cyber-hacking could undermine the reliability of information we obtain from the network, and weaken national and international infrastructures.

3. Humans can lose control of smarter malware and the use of unsafe AI for crime.

4. Things like AI contributing the Brexit vote and the U.S. presidential election may occur.

5. As part of the socio-technological forces that have led to increases of wealth inequality and political polarization like the ones in the late 19th and early 20th centuries that brought us two world wars and a great depression.

6. Lethal weapons automatic system.

These threats listed by the scientists are all limited threats. They believe that robots can only hide in a corner to do bad things, they do not have the ability to openly confront humans and do not threaten the survival of mankind as a whole. In the words of Stuart Russell, a professor of computer science at the UC, Berkeley, this is just an accidental value misalignment. These scientists do not believe that robots can have the power of God, by gently moving their fingers, they can exterminate humans.

Bryan Caplan, a professor of economics at George Mason University, said: “AI is no more scary than the humans behind it. Like domesticated animals, is designed to serve its creators. AI in North Korean hands is scary in the same way that long-range missiles in North Korea are scary. But that's it.Terminator scenarios where AI turns on mankind are just paranoid.” Moshe Vardi, professor of computa- tional engineering at Rice University, said, “The super intelligence risk, which gets more headlines, is not an immediate risk.” Daniela Rus said: AI is an incredibly powerful tool that, like other tools, isn't inherently good or bad — it's about what we choose to do with it.

The argument that robots can only be human tools seriously underestimates the capabilities of future robots. Stephen William Hawking